San Francisco Chronicle

High prices putting pressure on consumers

- By Stan Choe

NEW YORK — Cracks are showing in one of the main pillars keeping the economy out of a recession: resilient spending by U.S. households.

Consumer goods giants from PepsiCo to Kraft Heinz have described recently how the combinatio­n of high inflation and higher interest rates is hurting their lower-income customers.

It's the culminatio­n of everything getting more expensive amid high inflation, even if it's not as bad as before, and the drag of higher interest rates because of more expensive credit card and other payments.

Remarkably resilient spending by U.S. consumers overall has been one of the main reasons the economy has avoided a recession, at least so far. Capitulati­on at the lower end of the spectrum could be the first crack for the economy.

“The lower-income consumer in the U.S. is stretched,” PepsiCo CEO Ramon Laguarta said late last month when reporting better profit than expected, and “is strategizi­ng a lot to make their budgets get to the end of the month. And that's a consumer that is choosing what to buy, where to buy and making a lot of choices.”

At Tyson Foods, during a conference call to discuss its better-than-expected results for the latest quarter, one of the first questions asked by a Wall Street analyst was for executives of the company to describe how they see the state of the U.S. consumer.

“As you know, the consumer is under pressure, especially the lower-income households,” Chief Growth Officer Melanie Boulden said.

She said the producer of beef, pork, chicken and prepared foods has seen customers shift away from fine dining and toward quick-service restaurant­s. It's also seen customers drop down from those notas-expensive restaurant­s to eating more at home.

Kraft Heinz CEO Carlos Arturo Abrams-Rivera also said lower-income customers are pulling back from restaurant­s and convenienc­e stores. That's even as higher-income earners buy more Kraft Heinz products because they're spending more on travel and entertainm­ent.

At Mondelez Internatio­nal, Chief Financial Officer Luca Zaramella recently told analysts that U.S. sales of some products particular­ly popular with lower-income households have been weakening, such as Chips Ahoy cookies.

Much of the commentary recently has come from big food and drink companies, but several retailers will be joining them in upcoming weeks. Walmart, Dollar General and others will offer more evidence about how well or not lower-income Americans are faring.

Of course, it's not just the lowest-earning households bothered by higher prices for seemingly everything.

“We're in an environmen­t where the consumer is being price discrimina­ting and, again, that's not just something that's low income,” McDonald's CEO Chris Kempczinsk­i said after reporting his company's latest quarterly results. “I think all consumers are looking for good value, for good affordabil­ity, and so we're focused on that action.”

 ?? Mark Lennihan/AP 2017 ?? Resilient spending by consumers has been one reason why the economy has avoided a recession.
Mark Lennihan/AP 2017 Resilient spending by consumers has been one reason why the economy has avoided a recession.

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